Hiya. I've performed a handful of jargon card sorts in several libraries. 
"Digital Collections" has never been one that's on the table, but IMHO, good 
labels should be future friendly - and complicating "our collection" with 
"electronic," "digital," or "online" is an uphill battle. Rather, present 
"Collections" as a whole if you have to - in which some of the items happen to 
be digital. 

It's like this "audiobook" versus "e-audiobook" nightmare. We have found that 
in these cases, an audiobook is an audiobook - sometimes it's on CD, other 
times it's accessible through Overdrive. 

"Electronic resources" are pretty meaningless to folks who are accustomed to 
resources that are predominately electronic anyway. "Resources" should suffice. 

My two cents!
:) Michael

@schoeyfield
#libux.co

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Laura 
Krier
Sent: Wednesday, March 18, 2015 12:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] talking about "digital collections" vs "electronic 
resources"

I agree that "articles" is incomplete, but I also think sometimes we shoot 
ourselves in the feet trying to be totally comprehensive in how we describe 
things, and end up confusing people. What students think they want are 
"articles" so we should use that term as a pointer to our databases. Good 
instruction can help them understand all the different kinds of resources 
available to them.

As far as digital collections go (and whatever print special collections we
have) the key is helping students understand what primary source materials are 
and why they might use them. The format isn't as relevant, in my opinion. I 
personally prefer to call all our primary source collections Special 
Collections or primary source collections without immediately differentiating 
between digital and print.

I think too often we present our collections to students through the framework 
of our own workflows and functional handling of materials and less in terms of 
what they might be used for by students. It would be interesting to wipe out 
our current categorizations and really re-think how we present resources in 
terms of their functions for research and teaching.

Just my $0.02. :-)

Laura



On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 9:42 AM McCanna, Terran < 
[email protected]> wrote:

> Agreed - most patrons are usually confused by all of those terms 
> (including "databases") and aren't going to care about the differences 
> between them, they just want the content. "Articles" is 
> understandable, but incomplete - "Articles and Other Online Resources" 
> is inclusive and easier to understand, but too long. I usually go with 
> something like "Online Resources" to try to balance the understandability 
> with the intent.
>
>
> Terran McCanna
> PINES Program Manager
> Georgia Public Library Service
> 1800 Century Place, Suite 150
> Atlanta, GA 30345
> 404-235-7138
> [email protected]
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Erik Sandall" <[email protected]>
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 18, 2015 12:34:03 PM
> Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] talking about "digital collections" vs 
> "electronic resources"
>
> Most patrons won't understand the meanings of "digital collections" 
> and "electronic resources". We should use terminology that they would use.
> My brain is a fog this morning so I don't have any brilliant 
> suggestions at the moment. There is likely to be UX-type research 
> about this in the current literature. "Databases" is probably better, for 
> example.
> "Articles" is probably even better than "databases".
>
> For what it's worth...
>
> /Erik
>
> --
> Erik Sandall, MLIS
> Electronic Services Librarian & Webmaster Mechanics' Institute
> 57 Post Street
> San Francisco, CA 94104
> 415-393-0111
> [email protected]
>
>
> On 3/18/2015 9:25 AM, Matt Sherman wrote:
> > I haven't done any testing on that, but your understanding it the
> > conventional on in the field.
> >
> > On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 12:22 PM, Derek Merleaux <
> [email protected]>
> > wrote:
> >
> >> I've always been inclined to use "digital collections" to talk about a
> >> collection of things that have been digitized or perhaps including born
> >> digital things that are part of a "collection" in an archival sort of
> way.
> >> I prefer the term "electronic resources" for the databases and other
> >> things...
> >> -Derek
> >>
> >> On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 12:04 PM, Jenn C <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >>> Hi-
> >>>
> >>> We're having a discussion about some web site labeling and navigation.
> We
> >>> have a list of "digital collections" which are collections that contain
> >>> items we've digitized. There was concern expressed that we have
> something
> >>> labeled "digital collections" patrons might think that includes
> databases
> >>> and other items.
> >>>
> >>> Has anyone done user testing around this or have any experience/ideas
> >> about
> >>> how to handle the difference between these?
> >>>
> >>> Thanks!
> >>> jenn
> >>>
> >>
>

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